What if you’ve been fighting acne for years, using benzoyl peroxide religiously, and achieved no difference?

What if you’ve explored every natural acne treatment yet discovered, and failed to notice the slightest improvement? You might have thrown in the towel, believing that your genetics are unbeatable.

But there’s another possibility. Maybe you weren’t fighting acne after all. Maybe you were fighting pityrosporem follucilitis.

A disease with similarities to acne vulgaris, but enough differences that patients with untrained eyes have missed the subtle signs, and wandered down the path of failure. This is a disease which in rare cases, even dermatologists have misdiagnosed as acne. In the past or the future, you might successfully clear this master of disguise, but if you don’t know which condition you’re fighting, it’s down to luck. The next time you may not be so fortunate.

This condition is another case of phantom acne like rosacea or seborrheic dermatitis. The image you see in the mirror looks similar to acne, but the causes of pityrosporum folliculitis are wildly different, and so are the solutions.

Read on, and discover whether you secretly have pityrosporum folliculitis, and how to deal with it if you do.

What is pityrosporum folliculitis?

Pityrosporum folliculitis, or malassezia folliculitis, is a disease of inflamed, red, itchy skin with numerous tiny spots. It’s caused by a yeast that lives in human skin called malassezia, formerly known as pityrosporum, whose human subspecies is called malassezia furfur.

Malassezia is a commensal yeast, meaning that it’s a natural microorganism found in the skin flora of almost every healthy human being. The species is specially adapted to live on skin. Its full beneficial roles are unknown, but like p.acnes bacteria, it consumes fats and oils for its energy, and hence prevents clogged pores. Malassezia helps to curtail more infectious microorganisms as well.

Think about fungi, and you think about infection, but a healthy skin microbiome consists of 1-22% fungi and almost all of that is malassezia. At low levels, the immune system ignores malassezia and no irritation occurs…

…but like the equally natural p.acnes bacteria, malassezia levels can overgrow. Like p.acnes again, certain individuals have a lower genetic tolerance for malassezia.

In both circumstances, malassezia triggers an immune system response, and generates excess toxic metabolites. It creates its own unique skin disease – pityrosporum folliculitis. A disease characterised by extreme itchiness, tiny, red to white spots, and a red and inflamed appearance. You can see pictures of the disease at this link. It differs not just from acne but also rosacea, dermatitis, and psoriasis.

Differences between acne and pityrosporum folliculitis

At a casual glance, acne and pitysporum folliculitis look like the same disease. From five metres away, it’s very hard to tell the difference. But once you understand the signs to look for, spotting the difference becomes easy. The most obvious differences are…

The size – the size of acne varies massively, from tiny whiteheads to raging battlefields centimetres wide. Meanwhile, almost all pityrosporum folliculitis is small and hard, and consistently so.

The location – it’s often stated that pityrosporum folliculitis rarely occurs on the face, but this is completely false. One study examined 49 patients and noted the most commonly affected areas: the face (57.1%), the back (53%), the arms (38.8%), the chest (36.7%), and the neck (18.3%). 71.4% of those patients had the disease in more than one place.

Where pityrosporum folliculitis differs is in the higher amount of body acne. While acne vulgaris is strongly connected to oil, pityrosporum folliculitis is even stronger. Hence, the greasiest parts of the body are where the condition are highly prominent, meaning that the neck, the back, the chest, the shoulders and the scalp are vulnerable.

The facial distribution varies too: the chin and sides of faces are most commonly affected, compared to the cheeks with acne.

The itchiness – acne itself rarely itches, but pityrosporum folliculitis bumps are notorious for itchiness. Both anecdotal stories and studies have reported this. A person with acne can have itchy skin, but because of dryness and flakiness, or bonus irritation – not the acne itself.

The spots – this is the most obvious visible way to differentiate the two. With acne, you have whiteheads, blackheads, cysts and pimples. With pityrosporum foliculitis, you have very consistent, hard, red to white bumps. Many bumps look like whiteheads, but don’t behave like them, releasing a hard grainy whiteness instead of an explosion.

Pityrosporum folliculitis bumps also have a diffuse redness that normal acne lacks, redness of the surrounding tissue that spreads away from the spot and contributes to a “rashy” appearance. Normal acne can have this quality, but only when irritated, like after a manic, irresistible popping.

A shared characteristic is that teenagers are the main victims, as both diseases are caused by high oil production.

What are the causes of pityrosporum folliculitis?

Microbiome ecosystems on the skin are highly complex, and malassezia overgrowth isn’t close to fully understood yet. But like acne itself, oily skin is a big factor because malassezia yeasts consume it as their food source. Elevated DHT, insulin or vitamin A deficiencies can thus lead to this disease.

Heavy abuse of antibiotics is also involved. In the world of microorganisms, yeasts and bacterial strains constantly compete with each other. A deficiency in bacteria caused by tetracycline and its cousins can give malassezia an opportunity to take over, upsetting its natural balance. Benzoyl peroxide abuse can also trigger this chain of events. The wrong kind of acne strategies can give way to a very different disease.

Type 2 diabetes has also been linked to malassezia overgrowth. Malassezia is particularly abundant in hot and humid climates, an environment this yeast loves for expanding beyond its natural territory. If your yeast is already spreading slightly, such climates will accelerate it.

Malassezia can also trigger a more benign condition called Pityriasis versicolor, characterised by pale and depigmented patches of skin. A much more famous symptom of malassezia is dandruff. If you’re a man or woman with greasy hair genetics, malassezia yeasts can find a delightfully comfortable home on your scalp. If they multiply even further, they consume the oils to such an extent that moisture evaporates and skin cells fall apart.

Hence, malassezia causes dandruff, a dry and flaky scalp, joining zinc deficiency and poor protein consumption. This is connected to pityrosporum folliculitis as well, because flakiness can be another symptom.

The implications

What if you secretly have pityrosporum folliculitis, but believe that you have acne and strategize accordingly? Firstly, eating more antioxidants will be ineffective, because as far as we know, squalene peroxide has no involvement.

Secondly, many of the great strategies which are proven to work for acne are not proven for pityrosporum folliculitis. Zinc, selenium, vitamin E, green tea, and NAC are all proven to reduce acne. The reverse is also true. Stress is proven to increase acne, as are sunflower seeds; will rejecting them be effective for pityrosporum foliculitis? The far sparser research casts every great acne strategy into uncertainty.

But the biggest problem is the war on p.acnes bacteria, an excellent idea to prevent acne, but the exact opposite here. Benzoyl peroxide and antibiotics are the staple medications for acne. Despite their side effects, they work in the short term, but they will simply cement the dominance of the malassezia yeast. Natural topical treatments like rosemary extract, tea tree oil, and tamanu oil are identical; these excellent remedies are proven to inhibit p.acnes, but not malassezia.

Ultimately, you will end up blasting away at p.acnes harder and harder, only to watch your skin get messier and messier. In time, you will probably disregard everything anybody tells you and simply give up. That’s why it is vital to establish what your skin condition really is.

How do you treat it?

The prescribed anti-fungal medication for pityrosporum folliculitis is ketoconazole. You can take ketoconazole as an oral medication, but a ketoconazole-containing shampoo called Nizoral is a favourite among the yeast-infected.

Your orders are to apply Nizoral while in the shower, leave it to absorb for 5 minutes, and wash it off promptly. Ketoconazole inhibits malassezia very effectively, and its effects linger on the skin for 3 days after application. If you use ketoconazole, once every 3 days is enough.

But oral ketoconazole was banned in many countries for causing liver damage. While topical application is safer, it’s still known to irritate the skin. It’s also an indiscriminate, napalm-like yeast killer. After all, it’s designed to kill a wide range of fungi, and while its damage isn’t proven, the delicate balance of the skin’s ecosystem should always be approached wisely. Some of the scenarios discussed earlier illustrate this…

Alternative treatments

…which is why natural treatments should never be ignored. Not just because they are natural, but because they are less discriminate, under-investigated and potentially highly effective.

Tea tree oil was the first natural solution to be discovered; this study tested it against 22 species of malassezia furfur and 32 species of the yeast candida. Tea tree oil was very active against malassezia in particular, requiring low concentrations. Two unexpected remedies were garlic and onions, found in this study to be promising against 25 different strains of malassezia.

This giant review analysed 108 different essential oils, and garlic was reaffirmed as an effective malassezia killer. Interestingly, lime oil was the strongest essential oil by a big margin, but I strongly recommend against lime oil due to its photosensitising properties, unless you’re in a hut in the middle of a snowy winter. The promising oils revealed in this study therefore included thyme oil, oregano oil, caraway seed oil, pimento seed oil, and catnip oil.

Just as importantly, it revealed the top quality acne treatments which had no effect: lavender oil, peppermint oil, rose water, and rosemary extract. Weirdly, tea tree oil had no effect in this study; perhaps it was a dodgy batch, but that’s a mark against it.

Perhaps the most surprising remedy is cinnamon. In this study, cinnamon was tested alongside thyme oil against two yeasts: candida and malassezia. In another unique power for this spice, cinnamon inhibited malassezia strongly, while the thyme oil was effective but weaker. Cinnamic acid and cinnamaldehyde were identified as the miracle compounds.

Identify whether you have pityrosporum folliculitis, and apply a mixture of these topical treatments daily. A mixture of cinnamon and thyme oil may succeed. You could also embrace laziness and combine cinnamon powder with cinnamon essential oil. Two other popular treatments are zinc pyrithione and selenium sulfide.

More importantly, you need to prevent malassezia from ever dominating your skin in the first place. Acne vulgaris and pityrosporum foliculitis are finally the same here – everybody focuses on treating the problem, rather than preventing it from inside the body.

It’s commonly recommended that pityrosporum folliculitis patients avoid natural oils to avoid feeding the yeast. But is it smart to obey this forever? You lose moisturising benefits, collagen-increasing benefits, and natural sunscreen properties. If you hate skincare in general, do you want to keep applying cinnamon oil forever?

To eradicate pityrosporum foliculitis, you initially need to curtail the existing infection, either with ketoconazole or essential oils. Afterwards, you need to prevent oily skin and the feast of fatty energy that allows malassezia to thrive. The same instructions for acne will work: reducing your insulin levels by eating less carbohydrates, controlling your DHT if you’re a woman, and correcting your vitamin A and zinc levels. Bonus strategies include topical treatments which inhibit sebaceous gland activity, including green tea and sea buckthorn oil.

Secondly, curtailing chronic inflammation is also vital for pityrosporum folliculitis. We lack knowledge of specific immune system chemicals that play a role, unlike with acne, but an overactive assault on the yeast creates the bumps and spots just like it does with acne vulgaris. Broad anti-inflammatory strategies like eating more zinc, eating omega 3s from fish, and avoiding omega 6s from vegetable oils will doubtlessly help.

Conclusion

I would look in the mirror right now and analyse your skin. You don’t want to waste months or years treating the wrong disease. If you do bear the ominous signs, consider the failed treatments you’ve used over the years, and consider whether their failure makes sense.

You might be annoyed or even angry with yourself, but look at it this way: you now have a precise explanation of why you failed. You’re no longer lost in the wilderness; you have a way forward.

Luckily, the differences are obvious. An interesting fact is that pityrosporum folliculitis and acne vulgaris rarely coincide with each other. It’s been confirmed by Koreans that overgrowths of bad p.acnes strains and malassezia rarely occur in the same skin pores. Whether this is caused by normal yeast and bacterial competition or a specific competition between these two microorganisms is unknown.

Regardless, this means that if you do have some easy-to-pop whiteheads, a clear sign of acne, it’s unlikely that hidden pityrosporum folliculitis will be bubbling away under the surface unless you live in a high-humidity topical paradise.

Comments

I used to have small white bumps on my forehead, which would occasionally begin to itch and then I very gently scratched them and that made the white thing get out to my finger without any pain or even feeling like something has gotten out of my skin pores, is this pityrosporum folliculitis?

Quite possibly, the fake whiteheads produce a hard whiteness rather than an explosive mass of whiteness that goes everywhere. Check if the rest of your symptoms match, e.g. were the spots small and fairly consistent? There’s a link to images in the article.

I also have small, barely visible white dots over almost my entire body (it is spreading out more and more over my whole body) and I can get red bumps essentially everywhere on my body, including my stomach, chest, upper arms and forearms… My chest is especially filled with those white dots, they’re all over it… I always assumed all of this to be Keratosis Pilaris or just clogged pores… Can it actually be Pityrosporum Folliculitis?

Green tea isn’t proven to reduce PF, honey has some evidence. Some advice avoiding all oils with PF, since it feeds the yeast, but you need a carrier, and with cinnamon oil or thyme oil the inhibition would outweigh it. I can’t tell without seeing you, but your description does not sound like acne. It definitely could be pityrosporum folliculitis, but check out the pictures first.

Judging by the pictures, it is likely I do have PF, but I’m still unsure, I have been trying every single thing possible against acne for as long as I can remember and yet after all of this hard work, there’s no improvement at all, in fact it might have actually gotten worse since pre-treatment, so that could be another sign that I have some form of pseudoacne, like PF.
What I want to know is, can PF treatments worsen acne, or actually improve it accidentally? I just don’t want to continue fighting a misdiagnosed condition (first it was acne, now it could be PF)…
Also, it is possible to have both at the same time, right?

AS far as I know, not to the same extent as vice versa, and regardless, you can suppress both. It’s possible to have both, but not extremely common. If you still think you have PF, then a possible strategy would be to experiment with ketoconazole (mentioned in the article) to start with. Given that it’s a strong medication, if you notice improvement after several weeks when all else has failed, you might have confirmed the problem. Once the problem is dealt with you can move on to softer strategies, but this would pinpoint what your condition really is.

That’s exactly what I also thought about doing in order to determine whether or not I have PF (trying Ketoconazol), but how long should it take to see results? And is it bad to apply it everyday in an attempt to see faster results?

If malassezia is the culprit then two weeks should be enough for improvement if you use 2% concentration ketoconazole gel. Daily is OK, but no more. Watch closely to guarantee that any improvements aren’t natural week to week variation.

After reading the article and finding out more on the web, I’m pretty sure I’m PF, so in the end, what is the best thing to do? Is it to use cinnamon oil to destroy all? How should I use it for efficiency? thank you very much

Like I said to the guy commenting above, it’s smart to run a test with ketoconazole to confirm whether you really do have PF. Then you can run a short suppressing cycle to get the PF back to normal levels, and then use a small amount of cinnamon oil every few days to keep it suppressed.

Cinnamon oil is OK because the active compound, cinnamaldehyde, is found in both the oil and the powder. Cinnamaldehyde has a bonus ability to increase collagen as well. However, you might still be mistaken about the yeast – there’s so many different skin conditions that you never know. Acne itself is simple to identify but all the other conditions overlap with each other massively. So I would definitely do a test run with the ketoconazole first.

I would dilute it using a carrier oil anyway, because you need a fat to enhance penetration. Grapeseed oil will do the trick. As for side effects, cinnamon oil is fairly safe but cases of irritation and burning have been reported, so diluting it with grapeseed oil is a smart idea anyway. Eating it is definitely a bad idea.

Thank you admin! This is really a great site! I hope the admin will write an article about skin care and skin repair after acne attacks. Certainly many people have large scars and bad pores. And I’m one of them too.

Hey, it’s me again.
I’ve been applying the ketoconazole shampoo on my face for 5-10 minutes, 2-3 times a week for 2 months now (ever since my last comment) and don’t really notice any improvement at all.
Therefore, is it safe to assume that my pimples are not caused by seborrheic dermatitis / pityrosporum folliculitis / any other malassezia overgrowth?